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Fiorina hospitalized
21 seconds ago
...A national pro-family leader is siding with a Montana Supreme Court justice who recently accused his judicial colleagues of radically revising that state's marriage laws. Justice Jim Rice was reacting to the court's 4-3 decision last week ordering all state universities to provide health insurance for the "domestic partners" of homosexual employees. Dr. Donald Wildmon of the American Family Association says the ruling exemplifies the problem of "judicial activism" that is rampant in America. "If the Montana Supreme Court can require the state to provide insurance coverage for the partners of homosexuals, it can require any other changes it sees fit," Wildmon says. The end result, says the AFA founder, is that the ban on homosexual "marriage" passed in Montana in November is "meaningless and void" -- and that the court has "usurped the will of the people." Wildmon's organization has launched a letter-writing campaign to the White House that allows citizens to notify President George W. Bush of their opinion on "strict constructionist" judges and "progressive" judges.I'd love to see even one member of Wildmon's "flock" who can even enunciate what a "strict constructionst judge" is, without coaching. Read More......
The Democrats triumphantly reclaimed control of the Vermont House on Wednesday, four years after they were swept from power in a backlash against the state's first-in-the-nation law creating civil unions for gay couples.Read More......
Lawmakers and political observers said Vermont's voters have become more comfortable with the notion of civil unions, which grant gay couples nearly all the rights and responsibilities of marriage. They also said anger over an education funding law enacted three years before civil unions appears to have faded.
Longtime lobbyist Steve Kimbell, who represented advocates of civil unions, said the 2000 civil unions law and the education measure had upset the "natural balance of power" in the Legislature - a solid Democratic majority in both the House and Senate.
In his December 31 nationally syndicated column, which the Washington Times published January 5 as a "Commentary" column, economist Thomas Sowell claimed that rather than marriage rights, what "homosexual activists" really desire is "the stamp of acceptance on homosexuality, as a means of spreading that lifestyle, which has become a deathstyle in the AIDS era."Bush is apparently a big fan of this bigot. Sowell went to a state dinner at the White House, and Bush even gave him a medal (funny, I thought Bush only gave medals out for starting wars based on a lie).
Sowell continued: "They have already succeeded to a remarkable degree in our public schools, where so-called 'AIDS education' or other pious titles are put on programs that promote homosexuality."
Who appoints liberal judges? Conservatives? Not very likely. Look for lots more liberal judges if you elect a liberal president.No, Mr. Sowell, bigots who lie to the black community about the causes of AIDS are the ones who help spread it to people who are especially at risk, like straight black women and closeted black men. Read More......
That means judges who will turn more criminals loose and impose their own pet notions as "law," including gay marriage in all likelihood, with the net effect being more AIDS when the gay lifestyle is legitimized to the young.
A top Republican, House Minority Leader Bruce Chandler, said the Legislature should delay ratifying the results of the election until more questions are answered....It's bad enough that they can't accept the will of the people now that their guy has lost. The great hypocrisy is that in the radio ads they feign concern about an injured Marine apparently couldn't vote. So the GOP is worried about a marine who couldn't vote, but George Bush and Don Rumsfeld aren't worried about sending troops to die without the right armor. And even the Republican Secretary of State said there was no evidence of problems with military voting...but that doesn't stop the GOP activist base. They use the troops for political purposes when it suits them, then send them to die without the right equipment. What a bunch of hypocrites and frauds.
Also Tuesday, radio stations began running ads paid for by the state Republican Party, declaring the governor's election a "certified mess" and urging people to petition the Legislature for a new election.
We gave 15 cents for every $100 of national income to poor countries. Denmark gave 84 cents, the Netherlands gave 80 cents, Belgium gave 60 cents, France gave 41 cents, and Greece gave 21 cents (that was the lowest share, beside our own).Read More......
It is sometimes said that Americans make up for low official aid with private charitable donations. Nope. By OECD calculations, private donations add 6 cents a day to the official U.S. figure - meaning that we still give only 21 cents a day per person.
With America's image tarnished around the world, one of the most effective steps Mr. Bush could take to revive it would be to lead a global effort to confront an ongoing challenge like malaria. That would also give Mr. Bush more credibility by suggesting that the "culture of life" he talks about embraces not just fetuses, but also African children crying from hunger.
"This might seem to run counter to the mood of general mobilisation, but it's a question of honesty toward our donors. We don't want to continue to lobby the public for projects that are already financed," he [MSF Director General Pierre Salignon] said in a statement.I've long been a fan of this charity because of their honesty and ability to run a tight ship without the bells and whistles that most other international aid organizations seem to require. While most organizations seem more interested in empire building and dishing out luxurious salaries and perks to the top execs, this group is focused on the task at hand and keeping a limited budget. Read More......
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